A few days ago, the starter button on my recently acquired 1999 Gillig H2000LF quit working. Will not start from either the driver's seat or the rear controls. It starts fine when I jump the starter relay. Still drives fine. I've noticed no other symptoms. I have the manuals and wiring diagrams, but if someone could point me in the right direction, I would appreciate the time savings. This bus is, of course, fully computerized.

If it starts when jumping the relay that is probably the problem, that relay seems to be a constant problem in many buses. Sometimes it is only corroded connections at either the start switches or the relay.

Since both switches don't work that pretty much narrows it down to the relay.

Since your bus is so new the relay is probably a generic cube relay, shouldn't be hard to replace.

I would start with what Gus said. You can check to see if the relay is getting current when you push the start button. If it is, you know it is the relay. If it is not, move up the line to find why not.

I still haven't had time to sort this problem. To clarify, the starter button is not sending power to the starter relay. This relay is not a solenoid mounted on the starter. It is part of a major electrical/electronics panel mounted in the coach, behind the right rear wheel well. It is what I have always referred to as a "Ford-type" relay since I'm not aware of any GM vehicles using something similar in the starter circuit. Shaped like a small can. 24v leads bolt to each side. Two smaller studs one one side facing me. One of the smaller studs is supposed to receive 24v when I press the starter button. It does not. When I jump that stud to the much larger positive lead that is always hot when the main battery switch is on, the bus starts without problem. Something upstream of this solenoid is causing the problem. I hope that by next week I can get back to working on the bus. The starter button issue will be a top priority.

It is good that you now have determined that the relay is not getting power from the start button. The next question is whether the start button is getting power from wherever it is connected to and whether it is passing it on. If there is power in but no power out, the problem is at the button-- clean the contacts or replace the button as needed. If the button is not getting power, follow that system back until you find the flaw. If power is going through the button but not reaching the relay, there is a break somewhere in between.

I don't know what your transmission set up is. The neutral safety switch can be at the transmission or in the gear shift.